
Michael Crichton's Prey is a fast-moving techno-thriller about a husband, father, and former programmer drawn into a dangerous experiment in nanotechnology. As the particles begin behaving like an intelligent, self-replicating swarm, the novel turns a domestic crisis into a race against invisible, evolving menace. It keeps the science front and center while making the threat feel intimate.
This is classic Crichton: brisk, idea-driven, and grounded in scientific anxiety. Readers who enjoy corporate labs, surveillance, family stakes, and speculative disaster will find a tense, highly readable story about innovation outrunning control, and about how quickly a breakthrough can become a predator. It is especially good for anyone who likes intelligent suspense with a hard-edged, cinematic pace.
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